Tom Cook <tom.cook@adelaide.edu.au> writes:
> On 0, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry <shalehperry@attbi.com> wrote:
>> On Monday 30 September 2002 19:04, Tom Cook wrote:
>> > #include <qt/qapplication.h>
>> > #include <qt/qlabel.h>
>> > #include <qt/qstring.h>
>> >
>> > then you should be able to compile with:
>> >
>> > g++ -c -o helloworld.o helloworld.cpp
>> >
>> > Note also that the usual (proper?) way of naming C++ source is *.cc or
>> > *.cxx, not *.cpp like M$ do.
>> >
>> > Tom
>>
>> actually cpp is a valid and common extension. In fact both qt and kde use it
>> for their own projects. I happen to use .cc but no use getting into a naming
>> scuffle.
>
> No, it's not worth it. I was just looking at the g++ man page that
> lists .cc and .cxx but not .cpp.
Huh? I see:
C++ source files use one of the suffixes `.C', `.cc', `.cxx', `.cpp',
or `.c++'; preprocessed C++ files use the suffix `.ii'.
--
People said I was dumb, but I proved them!